File photo of Delhi Police Commissioner Alok Kumar Verma, who has been named as the new Director of the Central Bureau of Investigation. PTI Photo

The Supreme Court on Tuesday reinstated CBI Director Alok Kumar Verma, setting aside the Centre’s decision to divest him of his powers, but restrained him from taking any major policy decision till the CVC probe into corruption charges against him is over.

The apex court said any further decision against Verma, who was sent on leave following the Centre’s October 23 decision and retires on January 31, would be taken by the high-powered committee which selects and appoints the CBI director.

The selection committee comprises the prime minister, the leader of opposition and the chief justice of India.

The top court said the high powered committee will take its decision on the basis of the findings of the Central Vigilance Commission inquiry. It said the meeting of the committee should be convened within a week.

The judgement was penned by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi. However, the CJI didn’t attend court and it was pronounced by Justices S K Kaul and K M Joseph.

The apex court also set aside the Centre’s decision to appoint senior IPS officer M Nageswara Rao, who was joint director, as the agency’s interim chief.

With the verdict, the apex court has set aside the Centre’s October 23 decision divesting Verma as CBI chief and sending him on leave.

Verma’s two-year tenure as CBI Director ends on January 31. He has moved the top court challenging the Centre’s decision.

Verma sought quashing of three orders of October 23, 2018 — one by the CVC and two by the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) — as being without jurisdiction and in violation of Articles 14, 19 and 21 of the Constitution.

Rao, a 1986 batch Odisha-cadre IPS officer, was given the charge of interim chief of the probe agency.

The Centre took the decision to send Verma and CBI’s Special Director Rakesh Asthana on leave after their feud become public. The top two charged each other of corruption.

The Centre said Verma and Asthana were fighting like “Kilkenny cats”, exposing the country’s premier investigating agency to “public ridicule”.

Challenging the government’s decision, Verma’s counsel and senior advocate Fali S Nariman argued that the CBI director was appointed on February 1, 2017 and “the position of law is that there will be a fixed tenure of two years and this gentleman cannot be even transferred”.

Nariman said there was no basis for the CVC to pass an order recommending that Verma be sent on leave.